News

Financial news has been breaking fast and furious, thanks to President Trump. Over the past week, he has: Escalated threats ...
Also in today’s newsletter, US set to ban Chinese tech in submarine cables, and Nvidia chief vows to ‘accelerate recovery’ of ...
While the inflation numbers aren't "as bad as expected," they suggest that President Donald Trump's import tariffs are ...
The deadline for the start of Trump's heaviest tariffs has been delayed a few weeks, but a new report has nonetheless shown ...
Top voices on Wall Street have expressed alarm over the idea that Trump could fire Fed Chair Jerome Powell, emphasizing the ...
Investors, not the Fed, control the interest rates that matter most to businesses and consumers. They might demand higher ...
June inflation hit 2.7% as tariffs bite. See why excess liquidity, new Fed pressure, and policy risks could fuel more ...
“Don’t do it,” the board wrote about Powell’s potential firing. “...Love or loathe Mr. Powell, Mr. Trump chose him. Mr. Trump ...
“The impact of tariffs is becoming more salient,” said Ernie Tedeschi, the director of economics at the Yale University Budget Lab, which has been closely watching Trump’s tariffs. “Apparel, which had ...
The pause on many tariffs was supposed to end this week, but it didn't. Despite that, reports still indicate that tariffs have caused a notable recent spike in inflation.
President Trump’s tariffs have yet to reverse the disinflation trend that’s persisted since January, baffling economists and the bearish views that color the consensus narrative.
This past April, when President Donald Trump started flirting with the notion of firing Fed Chair Jerome Powell, stocks and the dollar tumbled because investors worried that even talking about such a ...